When I magnified it to 1600% in Photoshop, you can see that the outermost row of pixels (ONE single Pixel width ONLY) is actually lighter (not really white) than the adjacent rows. Not sure why this is so. The fix would be to crop each image by a single row, or two pixels in width and height. Then re-submit the photos.

Yep, after I saw those borders (just for the memory: it's one pixel...) I went thru some uploaded pics as well and have found several pics, not just mine, with that border.

If you want to avoid it, first resize to an imagesize 2 pixels wider and higher, than the end size (example: 1026X770 for pics with a endsize of 1024x768) and resize again at the end after all your work on the pic.

I don't know, if this happens with all graphic softwares. I use Photoshop LE, for those interested.

And BTW: YEP, Jan is right, I tried to get those lamp posts straight, hoping, the result would be ok .

I believe it is something that happens only when you rotate images (or maybe when you crop images) - something in PhotoShop that does this - as on my own recently uploaded images such a border only shows on photos I know I have rotated.

I didn't see a border in your JAL 747 shot, Gerardo. I also received such a rejection, and I didn't see a border in my shot either. I use Photoshop Elements, and I believe I had rotated the image a little.

The extra step of going to 1026 x xxx and then downsizing is going to be time consuming-do we really need to do this to get a shot with a near-invisible problem accepted?

Screeners: How can this be a problem if we can't see it? If the border you object to is one pixel wide and barely visible what problem does it pose to A.net?